February 15, 2014

Sometime back, watched this episode on NDTV that covered the
debate on racism against the North East Indians. The debate focused on the assault of a 19 year old student from Arunachal Pradesh, one of the beautiful Seven Sisters of India, which have a rich cultural heritage and a landscape
endowed with beautiful waterfalls, Tea gardens and thick forests. The
debate ranged from how the North east Indians have faced racist attacks in the past and how they have been fighting
hard within this society to keep their identity up and sustaining the odds of
appearing different. The debate was powerfully action packed with panelists consisting of political leaders, human rights activists, a student and a
couple of academicians from reputed universities. As one stated, not enough is being
done for the Seven Sisters on the growth and development sector, that has led to a
huge exodus of their population, now predominantly settling themselves in metros to earn their livelihood. And then, there were a
few who felt, there was a need to look beyond those mongoloid features and
accept them for who they are, with respect. Whatever, the debate had a lot of sensible arguments, a few careless statements, some thought provoking questions and some crucial facts about racism in India. It ended as usual, in a truce where there was no solution, but just the basic definition of racism laid out in a more elaborate manner.

And, that set me off thinking – “What is racism?” And
the Internet showed me the most passable definition – “the belief that all members of each
race possess characteristics, abilities, or qualities specific to that race,
especially so as to distinguish it as inferior or superior to another race or
races.”

In my growing years, I have had a slight (if not
intense) taste of racism (by the definition given by Internet) and those questions at the time have been piercing and
rude. Well I am not from Seven Sisters. I am a migrated South Indian whose
parents have settled in North West part of India for a very long time. Despite
the migration, certain ridiculous questions concerning one's ethnicity don’t seem to go away. I
have faced questions like,

“Oh! You are a
South Indian?"

"You people eat on banana leaf right?”

“You people wear lungi no?”

and ridiculously stupid questions like,

“You people don’t speak Hindi at home?”

"Are all south Indians dark in complexion?" and so on and so forth!

And the funny thing is, even today, some people are not aware that there are four states in South India having their own regional lingo and culture. Having been brought midst an upper middle
class neighborhood mostly inhabited by North Indians, our
Hindi was never an issue as we spoke it fairly fluent. But then, there is always an uncouth section of people who have little
knowledge about the demography of India and absolutely no knowledge about the
cultural heritage of our country. When I started working, I got questions like,
“Oh! You are a Tamilian? You don’t look
like one! Your Hindi doesn't sound that way!” Of course, I restrained
myself from replying “Why? Aren't Tamilians supposed to speak other languages? Go get a life!”.
However, I wished people stopped shooting a tirade of such senseless questions, which though annoying never bothered me to this extent until I saw this debate on NDTV. And then I
realized, racism is this! It is terrible! The recent death of a 19 year old student in
Delhi who was beaten after a heated altercation over asking directions for a place, was appalling. And if this is what people face each day of
their lives in the so called progressive metros of our country, the word
regression would not be good enough to define the mentality of the society we
are surviving in. The struggle to fit in a racism ridden society, and still
managing to keep one’s identity intact is no joke.

And that makes me wonder, Why all the superiority
complex, after all? Yes, superiority complex is equally dangerous and more
intimidating than its alter ego – inferiority complex. Being fair skinned alone
doesn't make you bright. Being endowed with sharp features alone doesn't make
you any sharp. Acting superior because you are a North Indian or acting
literate because you are a South Indian does not make you a person worth looking
up to! The recent incidents only show the growing intolerance of each other which
is perilous to the mental fabric of our society. We need to know for a fact, that we all need each other at
some time or the other. Berating someone or trying to flaunt one’s shallow
personality is never going to help, neither the instigator, nor the victim. And
the general notion that a certain community’s migration has resulted in job
loss for another, is so totally lame. If a community feels so, they need to
work upon their skills and make sure that they are indispensable, rather than
resorting to driving away their competitors.

We all love to compete as long as
the word healthy caters to us alone. We, as a society feel happy when we get
success but feel otherwise when others achieve it, or worse when others achieve
better than us. A sense of intolerance to anything and everything is one of the
prime reasons for increasing incidents of racist attacks. We need to groom the
next generation to be more tolerant and sensitive to people around and also
ingrain in them that, “there is no
religion or sect or caste or creed that will decide your success graph. There
is only one way that will lead you there and that is hard work clubbed with sincerity”. And yes, no fairness cream will decide your oomph factor, but your intelligence definitely will. No sharp nose and doe eyes are going to fetch you glory, your dedication and hard work though, will! Only then, on a personal level, we will we be happy and then as a society, we will
find no trouble coexisting with diverse communities in peace and harmony.

1 comments:

You are right metro cities are supposed to be all forward and modern with better living conditions but majority of crimes such as rape, acid attacks, corruption and now racism are reported from such cities only which highlights the city's backward nature and small thinking! I am sometimes not at all proud of being a Delhite:-(We should definitely work towards this because racism comes unconsciously to us!!!